
Lost Leaders, Byron Isaacs, left, and Peter Cole.
Lost Leaders, the band that includes Byron Isaacs, bass player for The Lumineers, will play two shows in New York’s Hudson Valley come November.
This bill also features singer-songwriter Ginger Winn, who offers a compelling edge to just about everything she does.
This righteous spectacle of triumph, which will celebrate creative minds that defy description and empower creative abandon, will unfold Nov. 15 at The Falcon in Marlboro, Ulster County; and Nov. 21 at Park Theater in Hudson, NY, Columbia County. Both venues anchor New York’s Hudson Valley, which is home to the Town of Woodstock and gave birth to the famed Hudson River School of Art of generations ago.
Peter Cole is the Lost Leaders guitarist, vocalist, co-founder and co-conspirator. Together, Cole and Isaacs generate a creative chemistry that is fearless and unrelenting. The band’s latest album release is “Hungry Ghosts.”
Click here to learn more about Lost Leaders. Click here to see Lost Leaders throw it down during a jam with famed Asbury Park photographer Danny Clinch, an acclaimed harmonica player, during a gig at Transparent Clinch Gallery in Asbury on June 20.

Ginger Winn
Kingston, NY-based Winn hails from Charleston, SC. She came to settle in the Hudson Valley after recording at David Baron’s Sun Mountain Studio in Boiceville, in New York’s Catskill Mountains, not far from the Town of Woodstock.
That album, “Stop-Motion,” was produced by Baron, who has worked extensively with The Lumineers, U2 drummer Larry Mullen Jr., Lenny Kravitz and many other notable names. Winn released her second album, “Freeze Frame,” on June 13. After working with Baron, Ginger fell hard for the Hudson Valley and moved there.
Among her many accomplishments, Winn opened a West Coast tour for the Gipsy Kings; and wrote a haunting and engaging song with Matthew Baione, inspired by 9/11—“8:48.” Baron produced “8:48,” which generated a video that can be seen here. Click here to learn more about Winn.
